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The importance of search behavior and movements for spatial distributions of herbivorous insects

Andersson, Petter, 1975- (author)
Stockholms universitet,Botaniska institutionen
Hambäck, Peter, Professor (thesis advisor)
Stockholms universitet,Botaniska institutionen
Ehrlén, Johan, Professor (thesis advisor)
Stockholms universitet,Botaniska institutionen
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Roslin, Tomas, Docent (opponent)
University of Helsinki, Department of Biological and Environmental Sciences
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 (creator_code:org_t)
ISBN 9789174473681
Stockholm : Department of Botany, Stockholm University, 2011
English 51 s.
  • Doctoral thesis (other academic/artistic)
Abstract Subject headings
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  • Insect populations commonly show large spatial variation in density, and much variation have been shown to be explained by the search behavior applied by the insect when locating habitat patches. This thesis explores the importance of odor-mediated attraction for immigration rates of herbivorous insects in relation to the size of the patches and the density of host plants within the patches. By using electroantennogram and measuring moth antennal responses to sex pheromones and thereby estimating the relative odor-mediated attraction from odor patches in field experiments (Paper I, III), I show that the length of the odor plumes emanating from the patches increase proportional with the square-root of the number of odor sources. In laboratory and field experiments (with the weevils Cionus scrophulariae and C. tuberculosus and the host plant figwort Scrophularia nodosa; Paper II) and meta-analyses on multiple insect herbivores (Paper III), I examined whether the relative increase in plume length could also predict the immigration rates of olfactory searching insects in relation to patches with increasing area and increasing density of host plants. The experiments (Paper II) and meta-analyses (Paper III) showed that the observed immigration rates of olfactory searching insects was well predicted by the relative increase in plume length, as estimated from the electroantennogram measurements (Paper I, III). The importance of immigration rates, relative to the effect of emigration and local growth was also investigated for the Cionus weevils in natural S. nodosa patches (Paper IV). This study showed that the density-patch size relationships of the weevils during early season were predicted by the net scaling of emigration and immigration rates, and differences in density-patch size relationships between the two species could be explained by inter-specific differences in their emigration rates from small patches. In conclusion, this thesis shows that search behavior can be used to predict immigration rates and spatial distributions of insects, with implications for pest control, conservation ecology and general ecological theory.

Subject headings

NATURVETENSKAP  -- Biologi -- Ekologi (hsv//swe)
NATURAL SCIENCES  -- Biological Sciences -- Ecology (hsv//eng)

Keyword

Olfactory search
Habitat heterogeneity
Species-traits
Immigration
Scaling relationships
Patch size
Plant-insect interactions
EAG
Odors
Pheromones
Plant Ecology
växtekologi

Publication and Content Type

vet (subject category)
dok (subject category)

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